The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, May 19, 1866, Image 1

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Ore Hetou '£)irM. 6 — PCBJ.OB.EO will Ktf s > rcBDAT nv J \. W KU H. j. r. WOOTTKS. \v< >0T l’KX <S: A\ 1JX1I, proprietors. ,T (’. WOOTTKV, .Editor. THE NEWNAN HERALD. t0 f alitioi, gjtor*, gUpintliiiw, €miuncrtc, &t. Clje ‘Heliman Jtrato. F. S. WEIGH, - Publisher. St-BHCRIPTIOS : hlo in advance, $3.00 “ 1.50 “ 1 00 A ri„b of -iv " ill lie r ll.j'ved an extra copy, numbers complete the \olume.) TXUV t )(!«■ copy one year, |«ty:t u :e copy six months.... One copy three mon VOL. I.] XEWNAN, GEOEGIA. SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1S66. [NO. 36. Kates of Advertising. I Advertisements inserted at £1.50 per square j (often lines or space equivalent,) for first inser- ! tion, and 75 cents for each subsequent in- sertion. Monthly or semi-montlily advertisements inserted at the same rates as for new advertise ments. each insertion. Liberal arrangements will be made with , those advertising by the quaiter or year. All transient advertisments must be paid ! for when handed in. | The money for advertiseing due after the ! first insertion. •m 1 a:i' of <:ens region A Trip to t’.io Mountains. The editor of the Athens Watchman as been to the mountains, and in cotn- an y with Judge Hutchins, the Solicitor, ad the lion. J. H. Underwood, partaken the generous hospitalities ft' the ciri- <,f that interesting and picturesque —North-cast Georgia. From editor Uhristy’s account we make the following extracts: o On Thursday morning, (Court having adjourned the day before,) the party, in response to invitations extended to them by hospitable citizens of the “Tennessee Valley,” (a portion of the county lying North of tiie celebrated “ Rabun Gap,”) proceeded in buggies and on horseback fo that interesting section. At the Gap, we turned to the right a few hundred yards, to tee where the waters of the Savannah and Tennessee rise within a few yards of each other. A ditch of a foot in depth would carry either stream into the other. .Just here Col. Ruder- wood related an Indian legend, which may not he familiar to all our readers. Many generations before the appearance of the white man, a young brave of the (’herokees fell in love with the fair daughter of a Chief of the Yemassees, and solicited her hand in marriage. The Chief (to sliow the impossibility of giving liis consent) replied that when the waters •of the Savannah and Tennessee were found together, then might his daughter wed the Cherokee. Disheartened, the young man returned homeward, following the valley of the Savannah towards the {mountains, knowing that it would con duct him to a low gap. To his surprise lie found the head spring of the Tennes see within a few feet of the source of the Savannah. With unboundnd joy lie hastened to the Ycmassee village, and, accompanied by the chief and bis family, returned to the “Rabun Gap,” where the young lovers were joined together, and there “ pitched their tent,” and from whence, in their old age, they departed to the “happy hunting grounds,” “ Next morning a portion of our compa ny, with our hospitable entertainer and some of his neighbors, went deer driving, , w omfi went fishing for speckled trout., and the remainder to the Kastatocc Falls.— The drivers and the fishermen, some mounted and some on foot, crossed a mountain and went into the dominions of his Excellency Jonathan White. Ten deer were started by the drivers, but only one killed. Col. Underwood was the for tunate sportsman whose unerring aim brought it down. The party were out about two hours. During this time two o fishermen ” might have b,ceo seen po king about among the laurel thickets of Middle Creek, a large, bold and beauti fully transparent stream, so clear that the smallest object could be seen on the bot tom, vainly endeavoring to induce the “ finny tribe,” which they believed were concealed in those waters, to “ to lay hold ot the bait set before them.” After proceeding up stream some distance, they came to a succession of cataracts many hundred feet in height, and above which they knew uq mortal fish could ever go O’Mahony’s Defense of the Campo Bel lo Fizzle. IIf.adq’Rs Fenian BROTERriooD, I No 32, Fust Seventeenth Str., I New York, May 4. To the officers and members of the Fe nian Brotherhood : .As Head Centre of the Fenian Broth erhood, I owe to the circle of this organ ization a succinct statement of the recent movement on the Northwestern frontier, the result of which has caused such wide spread dissatisfaction in our midst So far as lies in my power at present I shall place the principal facts of the case before the organization, and give reasons which led to the movement, and then let the Brotherhood judge impar tially as to the sound policy of the ntove- * gan first at the eyebrows and rose to to crown, where it was a reddish brown. the It ded by Mr. Killian. Nothing, indeed, A Thunder Storm- that had been originally required was , Sublimely terrible! each rorky cave, [ninj; ! neglecte d, even though the expense far As crashing with loud thunders, quick light- came down the face in lines to the lower ! exceeded what I would have consented j Rush past hissing! How they whirl,and wave, J :IVV J. C. THOMPSON. Y. H. TH0KPS0X much as our beards grow. The np- to incur, had the expedition not started j And gleam with horrid beauty! Now lightin: already. If, then, the performance of , rur ( iy pj e n—a sea of fire, they lave the requirements on headquarters could j The darkling gorge, its blackness height have insured success, victory was certain. But from the start, treason or folly | threatened to defeat the attempt. Though surprise were indispensable per hair : secrecy and to prompt and effective work, the whole of the aims of the exp:dition, together with its destination, were next morning laid bare to friend and foe through the columns of the New York press. When the first detachment of men arrived at Kastport, it was found that their arms had not yet reached that port, ening ; The heavy hailstones crush and torrents hiss While headlong tumblingdowa the dark abyss. incut itself, and as to the motives of the I and that the British, warned through the parties who arc responsible for either its ! press, had, in anticipation of the intended inception or its failure. ! attack, placed an armed force at Campo For months previous to this movement, j Bello, and sent war steamers into its sur- communications were continually pouring i rounding waters. Land and naval forces in from the circles in nearly every sec- j of the United States appeared also, with Irion of the Union, complaining of delay | promptitude on the scene,, and seized a in the inauguration of active war opera tion, and asserting that, if sueh opera tions were not speedily begun, it would be impossible to keep the members to gothcr much longer, as they threatened either to forsake the organization alto gether, or to give their support to another association purporting to he for the libe ration of Ireland, but really for the sub jugation of Canada, and in opposition bo the wishes of Janies Stephens, C*. K. I. R. Indications of this spirit of impatience were rapidjy increasing in this country, while at the same time vast numbers of the organized I. R. B. were pouring into our ports in consequence of the suspen sion of the Habeas Corpus act. These twQ .causes combined brought a pressure upou these headquarters that it seemed impossible to resist without imperilling the existence of the Fenian organization. A session of the central council was sum moned in the emergency, in order to de termine the course to be pursued under the existing circumstances. During the session, which commenced on the 17th of March last, at a joint meeting, com posed of C. C. and the chiefs of bureaus, an expedition to Campo Bello was pro posed by II, Doran Killian, and warmly advocated by Mr. P. A. Finnefc. The island was represented by the proposer of the measure to be neatral territory, claim- ed'alike by Great Britain and the United States, while no clear title to its owner ship had been established by either. It was proposed that the men engaged in its occupation proceed to Kastport, Me,, without arms, and in civilian attire, so as to commit no overt violation of the laws of the American Republic, while muni tions of war, arms and other supplies were to be sent to the same place by a different route. Upon gaining possession of the island, it was represented that an armed force could be organized there, either for the immediate invasion of Ireland or for the manning of privateers to prey upon British commerce, and thus commence hostilities. It was also forcibly insisted Turning back, they fished down stream j on, and, from tho encouraging promises until they reached another cataract ot greater magnitude. The mystery was at once explained. They had beeu fishing between two impassable cataracts, aud would have done as well iti a tub af wa ter! Of course the fishermen, who had ;nado large calculations, were teased no little by the move successful huntsmen, when they all met at the hospitable resi dence of Mr William Garland, of Macon county, North Carolina, where dinner awaited them.” I A Camel's Reveuge- A lad of about fourteen had conducted a large camel, laden with wood from one village to another, at half an hour s dis tance or so. As the animal loitered or turned out of its way, its conductor struck it repeatedly, and harder than it seems to have thought he had a right to do. But not finding the occasion favorable for taking immediate quits, it “ bode its time;” nor was the time long in coming. A few days later the same lad had to re- conduct the beast, but unladen, to his own village. When they were about halt way on the road, and at some distance from any habitation, the camel suddenly stopped,’ looked deliberately round in every direction to assure itself that no one was within sight, and finding the road far and near of passers-by, made a step forward, seized the unlucky boy’s head in its monstrous t^ftuh, and lilting him up in the air flung him down again on the earth with the upper part of his .skull completely torn off, and his brains scattered on the ground. Having thus satisfied its revenge the brute quietly re sumed its pace toward the village, as though nothing were the matter, till some men who had observed the whole, though unfortunately at too great a dis tance to bo able to afford timely help, came up and killed it,—f\fyrave ; s Trav els in made to u$ from mauy quarters, proved with apparent likelihood that, wore the first blow successfully struck from this, or, indeed, from any other point, it would be sustained and followed up by the friends of Ireland and the enemies of Great Britain throughout the United States; that privateers would be exten sively fitted out; and that Great Britain would be attacked it* her commerce upon the American waters. Other eventuali ties were brought forward, to which it were unwise to refer to here. Further more, it was shown, and I have since as certained its correctness, that Campo Bel lo could be taken within the space of one day after the arrival of our friends in Kastport. , The majority of the Central Council and myself were opposed to the raid upon Campo Bello as an isolated movement, though in favor of it as a movement co operative with a descent upon Ireland and the launching of privateers. It was also the all but unanimous opinion of those present that no movement should be make until after the arrival of James schooner laden with supplies for the ex pedition. Under these circumstances, and being informed that nothing further could be done—nothing at all commensurate with what was expected—I telegraphed an order for the prompt recall of the men. This order was not complied with, and thence arose the necessity for large ex penditures for the men’s support, as once they were th<6f<e I could not desert them. Now that this thing is passed without loss of life, I must say that I see many encouraging features about it. Not the least of these are the courage, hardihood devotedness and discipline of both officers and men—their unwillingness to return without a fight—their willingness to go anywhere they were wanted to meet the ancient foe of their race. The ghief drawback consists in the disorganization consequent upon failure, and the disappointment of the brave hearts of our men. It was the plan, or rather the handling of the plan, that was defective. The men of the rank and file were equal to any task commensurate with their numerical strength. The whole matter is now under consid eration before a select committee appoin ted by a convention of the Manhattan district. The report will be placed before you before many days. There have been some great mistakes made by myself and others connected with this affair, and much discontent and bickering has thence arisen. The latter will, I trust, be obliterated by the arrival of James Stephens, who is expected here early next week. To him, to the Directory, as to a convention of the F. B., I shall more fully explain the inducements that led me to abandon, for a while, my own well-tried policy of look ing to Ireland, and Ireland alone, as the place to begin our Fenian campaign. Whether this great mistaken move of mine be pardoned or not, in consideration of my constant successes under severest trials, during the past eight years, you shall ever find me prompt to do my duty as a Fenian, whether private in the ranks or in an official position. The lesson I have learned teaches me, and should teach all true Fenians, that we should never forget the grand revolutionary maxim: Blacker and blacker grows the dusky air! ’Tis night, except as through the rendin cloud Leap the huge fires, the eehein A moment rolling back the gloomy shroud, Aud lighting each peak with mighty glare. Flash calls to flash, iu thunders long and loud: The black lake shines, a meteoric sea Of bubbles, dancing joyously and free. Harken ! 'tis the mighty earthquake's crash ! Tli«* echoes shout with rapturous delight! The mouulaiiis quiver as the fitful flash Hurls the huge pine adown the giddy height ip was covered with coarse short the lower lip had longer hair. The eyelids were very slight and thin ; eye brows straight, aud three quarters of an inch long. “ Du Challu having caged his prisoner, ! tried to make friends with it. 'J his. • however, the captive seemed to think i adding insult to injury. It retreated, sullenly roaring, to the furthermost eorn- ... i er of the prison, and, when its amiable jailer approached to reassure it, darted at his legs, and, despite a nimble retreat, succeeded iu catching Du Challu’s trow- sers in his teriible grip, and tearing a C. THOMPSON & BRO. VTT OULD respectfully inform their friends \V and the public generally, that they can j be found i Up Stairs, over the Store-Room of Eedwine, Culpepper & Co., and are prepared to MAKE AND REPAIR iFTUTIRIUTITTjriEt-E at the shortest notice and in good st\Ie. We are also prepared to make April 14-32-tf. VIRGINIA TOBACCO HOUSE. To the dark pool; one loud.convulsivesplash- ^ ~ h roarC(1 au J'leaped and mouth- ed, and as though nothing short ot rending his enemies to little bits would ever pacify him, food was thrust between otjbis cage t0 DO p ur P ose > * ,e ^pPpPKFneitrit-r eat nor drink, and met 'advances r '“ A-P ot wt.r ? »d some forest ber- liL ries were procured lor the prisoner, and [ vou wiH find him ever readr a „d willing to when the company had retired out of sight he condescended to take his dinner. On the seeond day, however, he was even more vindictive and outrageous than the first. No one could go near his cage Either at- accommodate all auu give GOOD BARGAINS, One bound, and all is vanished, like the light Which lit them hither. Who hath suie defense But lie whose safety is Omnipotence? “The patient dint and powder shock Can blast an empire like a rock.” It must not be forgotten that the Cam po Bello movement was expected to have been simultaneous with the launching of an Irish ironclad, owned by the Irish Republic, in the American waters. In this there arose, unexpectedly considera ble delay, consequent upon “ red tape ” formalities, and thus one of the principal requtsitc-g for the successful carrying out of the plan was not available in time. I remain yours, fraternally, John O’Mahont, H. C. F. B. The President’s Partner. A writer in the Memphis Post, who dates his letter from Tuscumbia, Alabama, says: While Andrew Johnson is elevated to the highest office in the gift of the people, Stephens, then and still daily expected j 0 ]j D £ .Morgan, his former partner at on these shores. Gen. W in. G. Halptn, Q. reenT ijj e> Tennessee, in the tayloring who had recently landed^ from lrelan^ , jj US j nesSj j g Jiving here, plying his old most forcibly insisted on this point. S>o trac j c ail( j occasionally transacting some did Messrs.Rogers,Kavanagh,Uoh Down-1 business connected with his office, viz: ing, and Capts. Tobin and Mebafferty.— 0 f t }j e peace to which he was but A resolution to this effect was actually recent jy appointed. The Squire says he passed before the council adjourned. was decidedly a better taylor than old Next day, unfortunately, by the erro- an d thinks it passing strange that neous statements made to me of the neu-1 f ortune should smile upon the two, and trality of the place to be captured, and ■ eVGDd oi muoh surprise that A»dy does under the pressure of impatient members j UQt ren , en iber him when ho looks over the of the New York circles, the tlshtin^ | j ong j; st 0 f t he lucrative offices to be filled, material of which had been, without my : ani f w ith some emphasis declares if he knowledge or consent, ordered to report were p res ;d e nt that nowithstanding for immediate duty, and thrown «P j Andy’s inferiority as a taylor, L« would employments, I was induced to consent ma j.* jjj m sec0 nd to none in the list ot to a sudden movement, and to sign an a po j ntinents . Mrs. Morgan is the Pres- authorization for Mr. Killian to commence . 0ff n cousin, which fact also gives it. The comparatively small expense at | fche >g^ uire g(XK j caase t0 complain of his _ „ which it was insisted the thing could be chum’s strange conduct. $aU-V colored physician from England j done was also & great inducement to me j h eated in Columbus, Migs,, last week, at the time. I, moreover, felt somewhat ^ ^ Qrr and other prominent citizens and caused some sensnsatiou, both among impatient myself, now that we had a nawi j ^ outh Carolina, propose to force .o hove our national «« »»hrW common school system for on the Atlantic with a» little delay as } colored ohUtlren. possible. . „ , i _ | _ Accordingly, I allowed ^ portion ot me ~ »« fiir fintnort ftom New The darkey who sreased his .eet ~o Capture of a Live Gorilla.—Adventur of a Pyrenes Hunter. Du Chaillu, the celebiwted African traveler, and the first discoverer of the gorilla, thus describes the capture of the first specimen he succeeded in taking alive: “ On the 4th of May I had one of the greatest pleasures of my whole life.— Some hunters who had been out on my account brought in a young gorilla alive. I cannot describe the emotions with which I saw the struggling little brute dragged into the village; all the hardships I had endured in Africa were repaid at that moment. It was a little fellow of be tween two and three years old, two feet aud six inches long, and as fierce and stubborn as a grown animal could have been, « By the hunters’ account they were going, five in number, to a village near the coast, and walking very silently through the forest. Then they heard what they immediately recognized as the cry of a young gorilla for its mother.— The forest was silent. It was about noon and they immediately determined to fol low the cry. Presently they heard it again. Gun in hand, the brave fellows crept noislcssly towards a clump of irood, where the baby gorilla evidently was.-— They knew the mother would be near; agd there was a likelihood that the male, the most dieaded ot all, might be there, too. But they determined to risk all, and, if possible, take the young one alive, knowing what joy it would be for me. Presently they perceived the bush moving, and crawling a little further on in dead silence, scarce breathing with excitement, they beheld what has seldom been seen, even by the negroes, a young gorilla, sit ting on the ground, eating some berries that grew close to the earth. A few feet further on sat the mother, also eating of the same truit. “ Instantly they made ready to fire, and none too soon, for the old female saw them as they raised their guns, and they had to pull their triggers without delay. Happily, they wounded her mortally and she fell. The young one, hearing the noise of the guns, ran to his mother, hiding his face and embracing her body. The hunters immediately rushed to the two, hallooing for joy as they ran on ; but this roused the little oue, who instantly let go his mother and ran to a small tree, which be alitnbcd with agility, where he sat and roared at them savagely. They were now perplexed how to get at him : no one cared to run the chance of being bitten by the savage little beast, and shoot it they would not. At last they cut down the tree, and as it fell, dexterously threw a cloth over the head of the young mon ster, and thus gained time to secure it while it was blinded. With all these pre cautions, one of the men received a severe bite on the hand and another had apiece taken out ot his leg. “ As the little brute, though so dimin utive, and the merest baby for age, was astonishingly strong, and by no means good tempered, they could not lead him. Ho constantly rushed at them, so they were obliged to get a forked stick, in which his neck wag inserted in such a way that he eould not escape, and yet cculd be kept at a safe distance. In this uncomfortable way he was brought into the village, where the excitement was in tense. As the animal was lifted out of all eon- TTTTTOT -Tin I y n WnULlbiMlLtlj OR RETAIL. with the most obstinate tempt. “ On the fourth day he managed to gnaw his bars asunder, and the prison was discovered empty. The utmost con sternation prevailed in the camp; the hands were called together, and a recap turing expedition resolved on. However, the cunning Joe (so Du Chaillu christen ed him) had not strayed far. Returning to his room to fetch a gun, a terrible, yet, to the explorers’ears, delicious, growling emanated from beneath the bedstead, aud there was master Joe Gorilla crouched down, and regarding his master with an unmistakable ‘touch me if you dare’ ex pression. “ How to take him was a puzzling question. He had shown such strength and such rage already that not even 1 , dared to run the chance of being badly ^ bitten in a hand-to-hand struggle. Mean- j time Joe stood in the middle ot the room looking about for his enemies. I dispatch ed some fellows for his net, and, waiting till he became quiet, opened the door quickly and threw the net over his head ; fortunately we succeeded at the first throw iu fatally entangling the young monster, wlioroared frightfully, andstruck and kicked in every direction under the net. I took hold of the. back of his neck, two men seized his arms and another his legs, and thus held by four men, this ex traordinary little creature still proved troublesome. We carried him as quickly as we could to the cage, which had been repaired, aud locked him in. Poor Joe, however, died soon after.” Fanning' is a Noble Calling. Farmers, as a class, are far from appre ciating the grandeur of their position, the nobleness of their calling, the intrin sic value of the labor. They do not plant themselves on the dignity of their profession; they do not feel the conscious ness that their calling is the very founda tion and corner-stone of the majestic temple which we call modern civilization. The wealth, the industry, the prosperity of our country are drawn directly or indi rectly from the cultivation of the soil, from the labors of the husbandmen. Let the farmer cease for a single season to sow his seed and cultivate his fields, and the whole machinery of the world’s in dustry would be sadly deranged or come to a full stop. The seas would be no longer whitened with the sails of com merce; the marts of trade would become silent, and the grass would grow up in our now thronged and busy cities; the rumbling car would no longer glide over our rairloads, and the ten thousand en gines, which are doing the work of mil lions of human hands, would be still as the grave. No one can imagine, much less depict in words, the desolation which would ensue, should the farmer for a sin gle year rest from his labors, and cease to cultivate his fields. We would, it we could, do something to recall the tanner to a sense of the dignity of his pursuit; to a realization of the usefulness of his calling; to a full appreciation of the high 111 and honorable position which he might hold among the sons of men and the childreu of God. We repeat again what wc believe to be the sober truth, that our farmers do not, as a class, at all comprehend the lwi"th Tobacco. Cigara, Snuff, Sods, Cheese, Crackers, Sugar, Coffee, Flour, Bacon, Salt, Sorghum Syrup, New Orleans Syrup, Spades, SI levels, Factory Cotton, Brooms, Water Bucket?, And a general assortment of everything kept in a rAMItY OROCERf, Go to the Tobacco House at once to purchase. February fl-“2-tf. HATS! OAFS! J. M. HOLBROOK, W OULD most respectfully inform the pub lic and his old patrons that he is now permanently located at his old stand on WHITEHALL STREET, (Siga of the Big Hat,) ATLANTA, GEORGIA, With a large stock of well selected HATS and CAPS, all of which will be sold lotv for Cash at wholesale and retail. Nov. 25-13-12m. J. M. ITOLBROOK. T. 3M. & R. €. CLARKE, WHOLESALE and RETAIL DEALERS IN J. LORCH & CO., Have just received at J. M. DODD’S old stand, South- West Corner Public Square,, NEWNAN, GEORGIA, A new and large supply ot READY MADE Enslisli cte Amorioan HARDWARE, CONSISTING IS PART O9 25,000 pounds Plow Steel; 5,000 pounds “ Moulds; Cast, Blister and German Steel; Plow and Tire Iron; Carpenters’ Tools; Blacksmiths’ Tools; Building Materials; Nails, Axes, Shovels; Spades, Mill Saws; Leather and Rubber Belting; Hemp and Gum Packing; Pocket and Table Cutlery; Horse Shoes and Nails; Guns and Pistols; And all other Goods usually kept in the Hardware line. Also Agents for Fairbanks Platform & Counter Scales- T. M. & R. C. CLARKE, Corner Line and Peach Tree Streets, ATLANTA, GA. Jan. 20-20-(5m. STAPLE GOODS. LADIES and GENTLEMEN’S All varieties of SHOES, BOYS & GENTLEMEN’S. NOTIONS Of all kinds; HOOP & BALMORAL SKIRTS { CLOAKS, CORSETS; HARD-WARE CUTLERY. Also a large and. full supply of all kinds of GROCERIES & CROCKERY. J. M. MANN, ) Salesmen J. A. HUNTER, J Newnan, Gn, R. T. HUNTER,) Salesmen JOS. NALLS, / for Lorch&Cu A. M. WOOD, 1 Salesmen W. MARTIN, / Franklin, Ga. Sept. lG-2-tf. • »• u u u j and breadth, the height and depth of the the canoe, m which he had come a little auj » . . , ? . ^jdotrn.he river, he reared and bel- *"»* ? e " t ' u!,< “! “"VT lowed, and looked round wildly with hLw I hands The farmer 3 call,,,- m^ noble wicked little crea, -Ivin- fair warnin- »"«• It ought to be magnified. It on white and black-—- ] iclfsburg Herald, Y\’e ^re infoimej that the colored por^ son alluded tj Wiis iu our city a few week? ago, not for the purpose of locating, bm which ure suoscriDers to a paper wfitoU expedition ty start for Kastport from-.-. , --- , , v, ^osed to publish in seme Mississippi! York via Ruston, in compliance with -ht! t ia ^.e w.u. no * _ ^ for the benefit of freedmen-nnd ; earnest wUfe- of the men epga S ed ,0 ><■ I went to steal oheteu, si pH tom the purpos to jfrocure subscribers to lie propos, tjWIi, for iuc IKTIJCUti Ul lRCUUlU) 4Ut4 , CdIk4COk **♦ _ - , I , . - z „/• R. ..... designed to convince those of the colored The needed supplies were shipped on the henroos in o cu. , . , fi persuasion their friends were to be found same day by a different route. Those; ga\ e as a reason ^ chickens *'Uth of Masons and Dixon’s line, and supplies, as well as the number of men,] he on y cum -r far ex'*'-' 4 • north of it.— C<duinbus (Miss.) Sentinel. He Dat that if he could only get at some of us, he would take bis revenge. “ I saw that the stick hurt his neck, and I immediately set about having a cage made for him. In two hours we j built a strong bamboo house, with the j slats securely tied at such a distance apart | that we could see the gorilla, and it eould see out. Here the thing was immediate ly deposited; and now, for the first time, I had a fair chance tu examine my prize. It was a young male gorilla, evidently not yet three years old, fully able to walk alone, and possessed, for its age, of the most extraordinary strength and muscular development. , “ Its gratest length afterward proved to be two feet six inches. Its face and hands were very black ; eyes not so much Eunken as in the adult s. The hair be- one. it ougnx to oe magninea. nought to be lilted up and ennobled in the eyes of all. It ought to stand highest among the professions and calling of men It ought to command the highest respect and the largest pecuniary rewards. And it will as soon as farmers march steadily up to the line of their duty.—Kaueat Far mer. m THOMAS BARNES, Depot Str., Newnan, Ga., Will repair neatly and promptly lft NyysxOasHacsss tt— 4 —asd— c&Acp'jt’ , September 30-4-lv. J. D. WATSON, attorney at law, AND REAL ESTATE AGE AT, . NEWNAN, GA., F OR Selling, Renting or Baying Real Es- ( tate in Newnan, or in Coweta and ad- Gen. Braxton Bragg is living on a farm joining counties. [Oct. 28-8-ly. in Alabama, acting as agent far another person. He has lost all he owned before the war. A man came home drunk on a cold night, and vomited iu a basket containing goslings, which his wife had placed be fore the fire, upon seeing which he ex claimed, “ My God, wife 1 when did I swallow them things V’ Who Wants Literary Aid? I WILL give Literary aid in any direction, for moderate remuneration. I will furn ish, at short notice. Essays on any subject, Orations. Poetical Effusions, Communications for the Press, and such like. All communica tions strictlv private. Address, enclosing stamp, * A. J. SMITH, January 20-6m. Newnan, Ga. P1KENIX TIN SHOP, -AT THE— TIN TREE. W. JVC. Roynol xXm W ' OULD respectfully inform everybody and the balance of mankind, that he is now prepared to furnish anything and every thing in the way of STOVES & TUT Y/ABE, At the verv lowest prices and shortest notice. Best Patent of Family Cook Stoves, from ?25 to §50, according to size] and outfit. I Tin Ware reduced 25 per cent, under* any other market, Come, come everybody, and buy! I will duplicate bills bought at wholesale in any market in the Union since the war. janqajy ?0-20-7m. SOUTHERN INSURANCE TRUST COMPANY, SAVANNAH, GA. CAPITAL 81,000,000. INCORPORATED , - - - - 1861. HENRY BRIGHAM, President. J. C. McNTJXTY, jieoretary. Do not neglect the security of reliable insu- mce. Policies issued without delay by T. P. HILTON, Agent, March 24-3IKtf. Jigwnan, Ga.